The Eat Sheet: Larry Bell Talks About His New Restaurant, Larry's in Venice Beach

The artist also reveals he'll open a show with previously unseen works Oct. 3.

Larry Bell, photo by Dustin Downing

Dustin Downing

September 9, 2011Degen Pener, Christina Moffitino

The door is open to artist Larry Bell's studio just a block from the sand in Venice Beach. Wearing a hat, his signature look, and puffing one of his favorite Nicaraguan Oliva cigars, the painter/sculptor/collagist is explaining how he came to have one of the neighborhood's hottest new restaurants named after him.

The spot is three-week-old Larry's, a laid-back cafe opened by the Hotel Erwin, a mere block from Bell’s studio. The tapas-style food, quite a cut above the typical fare at Windward and Pacific Avenues, is by chef Brendan Collins of critically-beloved Waterloo & City restaurant in Mar Vista.

"It might be sort of a quid pro quo," says the 71-year-old Bell, one of the pioneers of California's Light and Space art movement, along with Robert Irwin and James Turrell. He's had a studio in Venice since the mid-sixties and, along the way, stayed countless times at the hotel, which was formerly a Best Western called the Marina Pacific, and is operated by the Joie de Vivre hotel group.

At a meeting with co-owner Erwin Sokol, Bell suggested the hotel's name. "I didn’t like any of the names and I just spoke up and said I think we should call it the Hotel Erwin cause Erwin built it. And that became the name," says Bell, who splits his time between Venice and a place in Taos, New Mexico.

Sokol turned around and asked if Bell would lend his name to the hotel’s latest venture — "If I'd design the logo," says Bell. It's right there at the entrance to Larry's, a caricature in neon of the artist, complete with hat and cigar. A space above the bar is decorated with a collection of his cigar boxes and hats as well.

Bell's only demand? "I was quite frank that it had to be good if I was going to invite my friends." Bell's old pal Ed Moses has already been in several times. In the past three years though, his friends Robert Graham and Dennis Hopper both passed away. Recalls Bell: "Dennis was one of the first movie people ever to buy one of my works in the early 60s." Graham's former studio and residence — which his widow, actress Anjelica Huston currently has on the market for $16.8 million — sits right across from the restaurant.

The seminal Venice artist is about to inaugurate another space as well. He's recently rented a space right next to his studio where he’ll mount a new solo show, opening Oct. 3. The artist will exhibit some never-before-seen work from early in his career. It's timed to coincide with Pacific Standard Time, the sweeping Getty-funded arts initiative that will see forty concurrent exhibitions open this fall, all focusing on the influence of California in art and design. He's not benefiting from the Getty's largesse though. "I'm doing it on my own. It's a roll of the dice, bro."